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Teaching Computational Creativity examines the new interdisciplinary pedagogies of today's coding-intensive interactive media and design curricula. Students, researchers and faculty will find a comprehensive overview of educational practices pertaining to innovation fields such as digital media, 3D printing, agile development, physical computing, games, dance, collaboration, teacher education and online learning. This volume fills an important gap in the literature on creative computation, as practitioners are rarely challenged to reflect on or share their teaching practices. How do we design effective inter-, multi-, cross- and trans-disciplinary pedagogy and curricula? Brought together here are essays on the pedagogies that produce the so-called 'unicorns' - graduates who can code and create. Here, the intertwining of (what many consider mutually exclusive) artistic sensitivities and computational skills plays an essential role, calling forth a new kind of undergraduate curriculum attuned to the interweaving of skillsets and theoretic knowledge needed to create and innovate with ever-changing technologies.

Represents different disciplinary perspectives

Provides theories connected to practices and contexts

Offers a forum for practitioner-educators to reflect on their teaching practices

Editors

Michael Filimowicz, Simon Fraser University, British ColumbiaMichael Filimowicz is senior lecturer in the School of Interactive Arts and Technology at Simon Fraser University, British Columbia. He is director of the Cinesonika festival and academic conference, and founder of 4th Foundation, a university spinout doing curriculum development in K-12 coding and technology skills. He has published across disciplines in journals such as Organised Sound, Arts and Humanities in Higher Education, Leonardo, Empirical Musicology Review, and Semiotica. His art has been exhibited internationally at venues such as SIGGRAPH, Re-New, Design Shanghai, ARTECH, Les Instants Vidéo, IDEAS, Kinsey Institute, and Art Currents, and published in monographs such as Reframing Photography (2010) and Infinite Instances (2011). His portfolio site is http://filimowi.cz.

Veronika Tzankova, Simon Fraser University, British ColumbiaVeronika Tzankova is a PhD candidate in the School of Communication at Simon Fraser University, British Columbia, having previously gained her MA from the School of Interactive Arts and Technology at the same institution. Her research is in the area of interactive technologies within contexts of social appropriation and democratic inclusiveness. Her work has been published in journals and books, and her research has also been presented at various conferences such as the Association of Internet Researchers and the Association for Cultural Studies (ACS) Crossroads.

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